A:Mentioned only in Acts of the Apostles, Saul is the name of the apostle Paul before his conversion and his first missionary journey. Tarsus is also given in Acts as the home town of Saul. In his own epistles, Paul never mentions having been called Saul, or having come from the city of Tarsus. In spite of this, it is certainly possible that he had been called Saul and that he was from Tarsus. However, we can never be certain whether the author of Acts of the Apostles, writing several decades after the death of Paul, was mistaken in those attributions. Some of the key passages regarding Saul in Acts of the Apostles have parallels to a Saulus whom Josephus mentions in Antiquities of the Jews, with which the author of Acts is known to have been familiar. Josephus even talked of a riot in Jerusalem, led by Saulus after the stoning of James. Although this Saulus could have inspired the author of Acts, he could not really have been the same person as Paul.
Paul preaching Jesus on the cross and salvation. Jews deny Jesus.
After the death of Jesus. Paul taught of the life and works of Jesus Christ and his teaching of a New Covenant
I DONT KNOW WHAT THE MUSLIMS CALL SAINT PAUL BUT HE TRIED TO GET RID OF JESUS BY KILLING HIM AND RUINING JESUS' TEACHINGS
The teachings of Paul about Jesus Christ far more than the teachings of Jesus Himself, blessed be His name.
You put one Jesus by following His principles and teachings. His principle and teachings are found in the bible.
Apostle Paul
God - the source of inspiration of all revealed religions. Christianity purports to be built on the teachings of Jesus, but is more directly constructed on the teachings of Paul about Jesus.
Paul's mission was to preach the gospel to the non Jewish nations. The death of Jesus Christ as a propitiation for sin made Christianity different from Judaism. Paul just preached this.
Judaism. Paul, who wrote most of the New Testament, was a Jewish rabbi, before following Jesus. Jesus, was brought up Jewish, in Galilee, and also had rabbinical training. The disciples were also Jewish.
Paul, or Saint Paul, or the "Apostle of the Gentiles", was a Jewish convert to the teachings of Jesus. Through his travels and writings, he was one of the main disseminaters of Christianity. He is the early church teacher who is credited with opening up the teachings of Jesus to non-Jews, thus making Jesus a Savior to all men instead of strictly a Jewish Messiah.
Because Jesus was the Christ, Christianity is the faith that purportedly follows the teachings of Jesus. However, most Christian religions following the teachings of the epistle writer Paul instead. For example, Jesus says in the Bible "I am not here to start a new religion but to bring a new covenant." The fact that there are religions that follow the teachings of Jesus is in direct contradiction to his own words.